To bury oneself
Bury one's body in one's body, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǎ ng é m á iz ì, which means to bury the bones exposed in the wild for the government of the ancient people. It comes from the book of rites.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, the order of the moon: "hide your body." Zheng Xuan's note: "the bone is withered, and the meat is rotten."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
Fang Chunjie is a time of relief. The book of the later Han Dynasty
Pei Songzhi's annotation of zhonghuizhuan in the annals of the Three Kingdoms quoted from the spring and Autumn Annals of the Han, Jin and Jin Dynasties: "in the past, when the kings buried their bones, their benevolence flowed and their bones were rotten, how could they first predict their merits and sins and then bury them? Now that Wang Zhu has been added and the Dharma has been prepared, there is no shortage of religion. The law is based on the top, and the education is based on the bottom. This is the way to train things! Why should we make the male back die against life, so as to stand at the right time. Your highness, when he is a hundred years old, he laughs at the withered bones and donates them to Zhongye. How can he be covered by benevolence? "
Chinese PinYin : yǎn gé mái zì
To bury oneself
Picking orchids with hazelnut. pī zhēn cǎi lán
a good omen for military operations. bái yú rù zhōu
An ugly daughter-in-law must see her father-in-law. chǒu xí fù zǒng de jiàn gōng pó
Moving subjects and chasing guests. qiān chén zhú kè